Austin American-Statesman

Student held on race threat

Online posts warned blacks would be shot on Missouri campus.

- By Summer Ballentine

A white student at a University of Missouri campus is accused of posting online vows to shoot blacks.

A white college student suspected of posting online threats to shoot black students and faculty at the University of Missouri was arrested Wednesday, adding to the racial tension at the heart of the protests that led two top administra­tors to resign earlier this week.

Hunter M. Park, a 19-year-old sophomore studying computer science at a sister campus in Rolla, was arrested shortly before 2 a.m. at a residence hall, authoritie­s said. The school said no weapons were found.

Park, who has not yet been formally charged, is enrolled at the Missouri University of Science

and Technology. He was jailed in Columbia, about 75 miles to the northwest, where he was booked on a preliminar­y charge of suspicion of making a terrorist threat. Because the county courts were closed for Veterans Day, he was

not expected to appear before a judge until at least today.

The author of the posts, which showed up Tuesday on the anonymous location-based messaging app YikYak and other social media, threatened to “shoot every black person I see.” The posts followed the resignatio­ns on Monday of the University of Missouri system president and the chancellor of its flagship campus in Columbia.

Another threat said: “Some of you are alright. Don’t go to campus tomorrow.” The message seemed to echo one that appeared on the website 4chan — a forum where racist and misogynist­ic comments are common — ahead of the deadly campus shooting at an Oregon community college last month.

A message left on Park’s mother’s cellphone was not returned. A reporter got no answer when he knocked on the door of the family’s home in the affluent St. Louis suburb of Lake St. Louis.

By Wednesday afternoon, authoritie­s were investigat­ing a second threat on YikYak, this one leveled at the Rolla campus by someone saying, “I’m gonna shoot up this school.”

When the first threat emerged, the school’s online emergency informatio­n center tweeted, “There is no immediate threat to campus,” and asked students not to spread rumors.

Park has excelled academical­ly in science. As a senior early last year at Wentzville’s Holt High School, he was a member of the school district’s robotics team when his project won the honors division.

The St. Louis Post-Dis- patch reported that the project advanced to the Intel Internatio­nal Science and Engineerin­g Fair in Los Angeles.

A spokeswoma­n for the Rolla school, Mary Helen Stoltz, said she did not know whether the university planned to take any action against Park over his arrest.

On Wednesday, student foot traffic in Columbia was light as freshman Megan Grazman was on her way to class. Although she said she felt safe, “There’s nobody out. It’s a ghost town. It’s kind of eerie.”

Yixiang Gao, a Chinese student from Shanghai, said he also felt safe, but he described the campus climate as “very heavy.” He said his black roommate was not going to class.

Also Wednesday, the university said an employee who was among those who clashed with a student photograph­er during campus protests was placed on administra­tive leave while her actions are investigat­ed.

Janna Basler is the school’s director of Greek life.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States